Beavers

Editor’s note: As Creation magazine has been continuously published since 1978, we
are publishing some of the articles from the archives for historical interest, such as this. For teaching and
sharing purposes, readers are advised to supplement these historic articles with more up-to-date ones suggested in the Related Articles below.

Flickr/Steve Hersey (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Aquatic architects

The dam building ability of beavers is fairly well known, but beavers possess other
amazing design features which God has included in their anatomy. Beavers are air-breathing
mammals which spend a great deal of time in water. For this reason they need special
equipment.

First, the beaver has special valves in its ears and nose. When the beaver dives
below the water these valves automatically close so that no water can enter. When
the animal resurfaces, the valves reopen and it breathes again.

Perhaps their more amazing piece of equipment is their eyelids. If you have done
any diving or snorkelling you will know that water and materials in it can irritate
your eyes and wash out natural lubricants. Not only that, but your eyes do not see
well under water. That is why snorkellers wear goggles.

Were we original to think up this idea of goggles?

Not really. God designed beavers with ‘built-in’ goggles. Their eyelids
are transparent, so they can close their eyes underwater and still see extremely
well. Their transparent eyelids give protection to their eyes from water-borne irritants.

God designed beavers with ‘built-in’ goggles.

During winter, beavers must feed on the bark of trees they have cut and stored in
the autumn, using their specially designed, self-sharpening front incisors (perhaps
one of the beaver’s better known pieces of equipment).

The beavers collect the young trees (usually two to five centimetres (one to two
inches) in diameter) for food, cut them to suitable lengths and then transport them,
by holding them in their teeth, to their underwater cache, forcing the branches
into the mud at the bottom of the pond.

The tail is often held at an angle for accurate steering.

Amazing design

Which brings us to another amazing design feature. To retrieve the stored food in
the winter months when ice covers the pond, the beavers may need to chew the sticks
underwater. They can do this without water entering their mouths, because they have
fur mouth flaps between their front incisors and their rear molar teeth, which are
set considerably further back. These two folds of skin, one on each side of the
mouth, meet behind the incisors and seal off the rest of the mouth.

The beaver’s large paddle-shaped tail, which has a scale-like skin covering
it, is used as a rudder when it swims. This is particularly important when the animal
is swimming with a branch in its mouth. The tail must compensate for any uneven
drag from the branch, thus the tail is often held at an angle for accurate steering.

A beaver’s home is the world of a master builder. The lodge
is built out of sticks, and sealed from the cold with mud (but leaving ventilation
holes).

The rear feet of the beaver are large and webbed like a duck’s feet, to give
the animal good swimming ability. The two inner claws of each foot have split toenails,
which the beaver uses as a comb to groom itself and oil its fur.

Beavers use their smaller, unwebbed front paws to carry mud and other materials,
and to dig canals which they use as a means of transporting wood and also as a means
of quick escape from predators.

The fur of the beaver must be oiled to prevent water reaching the animal’s
skin. The oil is provided from two large oil glands. They are filled with a rich,
thick, deep yellow oily liquid, which the beaver spreads on its fur for water-proofing.
This, along with its two layers of fur, are so effective that water rarely reaches
the skin. A layer of fat beneath the skin gives further protection against the cold.

A beaver can swim submerged for perhaps 800 metres (a half-mile) or more. Most air-breathing
creatures would be adversely affected by lack of oxygen to the brain. The beaver
has special equipment to compensate for this need. Large lungs and liver allow for
the storage of more air and oxygenated blood. In addition, a beaver’s heart
beats more slowly when it dives, in order to conserve oxygen, and the blood is restricted
to the animal’s extremities while the vital supply to the brain remains normal.

Picasaweb/Matthew Muir

Hillebrand Steve, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Engineering skills

Beavers construct dams that may be hundreds of metres long. Construction of the
dam is done by cutting down trees and shrubs, dragging each piece to the dam-site,
and laying them in the water parallel to the stream (end facing up-stream). Almost
everything the beavers can find goes into the dam—live wood, dead wood, mud,
grass and rocks. When the beaver’s pond floods, mounting pressure on the dam
can cause it to break. To prevent this, if there is time, the beaver engineers a
spillway to relieve pressure, then fixes it after the water subsides.

A beaver can swim submerged for 800 metres (0.5 mile).

Beaver lodges are also the work of a master builder. They are built with sticks,
and sealed from the cold with mud. The centre of the roof is not sealed, which allows
some ventilation. Access is only from underwater, with more than one entry in case
of the need to escape. The beavers can gain direct underwater access to the cache
of sticks they have stored under the water when ice covers the pond in winter and
this is their only available food.

Truly the beaver is yet another example of the wonderful provision and wise planning
of a caring Creator God. Such variety of essential equipment could not have evolved
over time by chance and selection. All of the beaver’s equipment must be present
and fully functional in the animal from the beginning for it to survive its semiaquatic
life-style.

morgueFile/Carlson

This tree was cut down by a beaver.

publicdomainpictures.net/view-image.php?image=27057 (CC0 1.0)

A beaver lodge. To an untrained eye, the lodges might appear to be mere
piles of sticks, mud, grass and rocks. In reality, lodges show remarkable engineering
skills. E.g. beavers will quickly construct an emergency spillway to relieve water pressure
during a flood.

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Comments closed

A reader’s comment

George J.,Canada, 30 April 2014

As a farmer who lost nearly half of one pasture to flooding by beaver for all of one summer, I am not quite so thrilled with those master dam builders as the author; but I thought it was an excellent article. The ornery creatures on my interval had 11 different water levels with channels running between them and my 50 year old poplar, maple, and ash trees. I would like to point out that beaver do NOT restrict themselves to " the young trees (usually two to five centimetres (one to two inches) in diameter)". It is rather disheartening to see 40 and 50 foot trees chewed off and lying hodgepodge near their settlement. They then chew off the limbs and use them for food or building. They will eat some of the bark off the butts but up to 80% of the wood is left to rot.

A couple of editorial comments; you might want to show the air hole on your illustration of the lodge and the caption on your last photo says "In reality, lodges show remarkable engineering skills. E.g. beavers will quickly construct an emergency spillway to relieve water pressure during a flood." The spillway is not an example of the remarkable engineering of the lodge. engineering maybe; but it has nothing to do with lodge. No pressure builds up in the lodge regardless of how high the water gets, although in a high freshet the whole lodge can flood, hence the spillway "may" save the lodge............or it and the dams may be submerged under several feet of water.